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Labertouche
Airfield was a grass agricultural strip with a log constructed corrugated iron
hanger. Prior to opening Labertouche Sport Parachute Centre,
the airstrip was improved, a sawdust landing area was prepared,
timber packing tables were built, basic country toilets were installed,
the area around the aircraft hanger was fenced and a parachute storage
area built inside the hanger. By today's standards this
was a very basic dropzone but at the time most dropzones in
Australia were a country
airfield with nothing but the airstrip.
In October
1965, the Centre rented a 100 year old cabin
4 kilometres north of the dropzone for bunkhouse
accommodation. The house was built of solid, tree trunk size,
slabs of timber and had a number of rooms built onto it.
Here the jumpers ate huge
steaks cooked by Claude's wife Jean and held rowdy parties and
Cardinal Puff sessions. At the rear of the cottage was a
very tight dropzone and the staff (and some others) often jumped
in for lunch. The last staff jump of the day was always
into the paddock behind "Slab
Lodge" as it was known.
Slab Lodge was used as
accommodation for the early competition training camps conducted by
Claude and Bill. The local farmers saw the jumpers
as bringing a touch of colour into their lives and were very supportive
of the Centre. They sponsored prizes for the
Labertouche Cup each year and brought produce and home cooked
biscuits and cakes to Slab Lodge for Jean to share amongst the
jumpers. It was a beautiful mountain setting and jumpers
often were invited to jump into one of the local farms and have
lunch or afternoon tea before being driven back to the dropzone.
The Hines farm, a short way from Slab Lodge was the most popular,
the Hines family must have made good scones. The
original slab cabin was moved to a nostalgic theme park at Moe, a
town east of Labertouche.
About one year later the Centre leased a building from the Alcorn family.
It was 500 metres from the dropzone on Labertouche Road.
This building was more than 100 year old and started its days as the first local
school. As it was on the proposed driveway to the dropzone, it
became known as "The Gatehouse".
The Gatehouse had two bunk rooms: one with no gender discrimination that
was described as "The Gorilla Pit" and the females only "Bird Sanctuary".
A large lounge room with a fireplace, a long dinning room with a fireplace and
a kitchen. A long outbuilding with toilet, laundry and store rooms was
alongside and a large garage that doubled as a classroom when conducting
instructor courses, etc.
Along the
way, the sawdust pit was replaced with pea gravel. The
area around the pea gravel and the walkway between the pit and the
enclosed grass area were mowed every week and there was a small
fenced area for the instructors' telemetres (World War 2, German
anti-aircraft binoculars).
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An early morning shot of a jumper
approaching the pea gravel |
Two purpose designed buildings were built on the dropzone, containing a
packing loft, training rooms, office, snack bar and a large social area with
pool table, televisions and table tennis for use during weather downtime and
Saturday nights.
An
ex-military power generator was purchased to provide 240 volt
power and light, a large water tank was installed and telephone
connections laid for a kilometre to the dropzone.
Gravity
feed aviation fuel tanks were installed and an enclosure
contained ex-German anti-aircraft Telemetres for training and
competition.
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The dropzone in preparation for a
competition |
The toilets were upgraded to a large septic tank system and while these
were adequate for normal jump days, even with bush additions and extra toilets brought in, there
was always a strain on the sewage system when National Championships or
Boogies were hosted.
The parachute loft boasted everything from
sewing needles to a harness
sewing machine.
Jean's Snack Bar was renowned for its
hamburgers and steak dinners and on Saturday nights; many Pakenham
jumpers drove the 13 miles to Labertouche to have dinner on the
dropzone and retire to the Longwarry pub to revel with the Labertouche
jumpers. |